Ralph Giordano


Ralph Giordano was a German writer and publicist.

Life and career

Giordano was born to a Sicilian father and a German Jewish mother in Hamburg. Because his mother, a piano teacher, was Jewish, the family was persecuted repeatedly after the Nazis seized power in January 1933. Ultimately, they survived the Holocaust by hiding in a friend's cellar.
After his wartime experiences, Giordano temporarily became a communist. In 1955, he settled in the German Democratic Republic, but soon grew disillusioned because of his dislike of Stalinism and returned to Hamburg. Giordano left the German Communist Party in 1957. In 1961, he published The Party is Always Right! about his break with communism and the crimes of Josef Stalin.
In 1958, Giordano reported on West German trials of Nazi war criminals for the Central Council of Jews in Germany. In 1964, he joined the Cologne-based West German Broadcasting organization as a journalist and remained there until 1988.
In 1982, he published his most widely known work, Die Bertinis, a semi-autobiographical novel portraying the experiences of a family of mixed ethnic heritage from the end of the 19th century through the end of World War II. In 1988, it was presented in a television series aired on the Second German TV network.
Thereafter Giordano worked as a freelance writer and wrote numerous articles about his experiences in Nazi Germany and about the dangers of Neo-Nazi movements. He saw Islam as a threat: In a New York Times interview in 2007, he vehemently opposed the construction of a new mosque in Cologne, citing German mosques as "a symbol of a parallel society", and called the integration of German Muslims "a failure".
While working on German television programs, Giordano produced the first TV documentary on the Armenian Genocide.

Personal life

Giordano was married three times. His longtime first wife, Helga, died of cancer in 1984. He and his second wife, Tanja, were divorced in 1988 after one year together. Giordano was married to his third wife, Roswitha Everhan, from 1994 until her death from cancer in 2002. He lived in Cologne. Giordano was a close friend of black German-American journalist Hans Massaquoi since their Swingjugend times in wartime Hamburg.
Ralph Giordano died on 10 December 2014, aged 91, in a Cologne hospital of complications following a hip fracture.